City
Epaper

India’s Deep Ocean Mission paving way for big leap in Blue Economy

By IANS | Updated: August 21, 2025 13:35 IST

New Delhi, Aug 21 India’s Deep Ocean Mission, which has been launched with an investment of Rs 4,077 ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Aug 21 India’s Deep Ocean Mission, which has been launched with an investment of Rs 4,077 crore spread over five years, represents a strategic effort to develop advanced technologies for deep-sea exploration and sustainable utilisation of marine resources.

Spearheaded by the Ministry of Earth Sciences, the mission represents a crucial step toward strengthening India’s Blue Economy, an area identified by the Government as a core driver of national growth by 2030.

Covering more than 70 per cent of Earth’s surface, the deep ocean remains one of the least understood ecosystems. It holds mineral wealth, vast biodiversity, renewable energy potential, and climate clues that can reshape how humanity addresses pressing challenges such as global warming, clean energy, and food security.

For India — with its 7,517 km of coastline, nine coastal states, and over 1,300 islands — tapping into this resource-rich frontier is not just a scientific pursuit but also a national economic imperative, according to an article in India Narrative.

The Samudrayaan Project, launched under the mission’s umbrella, represents India’s most ambitious step into the deep sea. Its centrepiece is the engineering marvel MATSYA 6000, a human-occupied vehicle designed to transport aquanauts to 6,000 meters beneath the ocean.

The article highlights that in August this year, during test expeditions in the Atlantic Ocean, Indian aquanauts executed seven-hour dives aboard IFREMER’s submersible Nautile, gaining invaluable experience in piloting, buoyancy management, sample collection, and acoustic communication. These operations marked India’s entry into the exclusive club of fewer than half a dozen nations with deep-sea diving expertise.

Simultaneously, the team successfully collected over 100 kg of cobalt-rich polymetallic nodules from a depth of 1,173 meters in the Andaman Sea — a small but symbolic step toward future deep-sea mining.

The Deep Ocean Mission is aimed at developing indigenous capabilities in deep-sea mining, renewable ocean energy, and biotechnology which will enable India to reduce dependence on imports of critical minerals and strengthen maritime industries including shipping and fisheries.

It will also position India as a leader in global ocean governance and exploration and create new jobs in ocean research, engineering and tourism.

The mission embodies Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s vision of “Samudra Manthan”, a modern churning of the ocean to extract prosperity for future generations.

In line with the United Nations’ designation of 2021–2030 as the Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development, India’s Deep Ocean Mission aligns global responsibility with local opportunity, aiming to balance exploration with sustainability.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalIranian gunboats fire on tanker in Strait of Hormuz: UK authority

Other SportsUTT Season 7: Holders U Mumba TT retain title-winning coaching duo, national coach Sourav Chakraborty set for debut

BusinessGold may hit up to Rs 1.85 lakh on macro tailwinds this Akshaya Tritiya: Report

NationalWomen’s quota bill: Hema Malini, Delhi CM lead protest to Rahul Gandhi’s home

NationalSecurity cover of ex-Bihar Dy CM Vijay Kumar Sinha revised following review

Business Realted Stories

BusinessMaharashtra Flat Owners Welfare Association Emerges, Pushes Brokerage-Free Housing

BusinessOver 17.25 lakh 5-kg LPG cylinders sold since March 23: Govt

BusinessPakistan facing key economic challenge amid possible rift with UAE: Report

BusinessCentre approves procurement of 20 lakh MT potatoes in UP, more relief for farmers in Andhra, Karnataka

BusinessIndore Child Psychologist Dr. Vini Jhariya Addresses the ‘Intelligent but Struggling’ Gap in Student Learning